When Amy Viola Stevens was born on 26 February 1919, in Jenningsville, Windham Township, Wyoming, Pennsylvania, United States, her father, John David Stevens, was 27 and her mother, Lucy Hope, was 27. She married Howell Henry Nonnemacher on 19 September 1938, in Laceyville, Wyoming, Pennsylvania, United States. They were the parents of at least 2 sons and 2 daughters. She lived in Wyoming, Pennsylvania, United States in 1920 and Windham Township, Wyoming, Pennsylvania, United States in 1930. She died on 19 March 2005, in Tunkhannock, Wyoming, Pennsylvania, United States, at the age of 86, and was buried in Laceyville, Wyoming, Pennsylvania, United States.
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The Prohibition Era. Sale and manufacture of alcoholic liquors outlawed. A mushrooming of illegal drinking joints, home-produced alcohol and gangsterism.
Women are given the right to vote under the Nineteenth Amendment.
Caused by the tensions between the United States and the Empire of Japan, the internment of Japanese Americans caused many to be forced out of their homes and forcibly relocated into concentration camps in the western states. More than 110,000 Japanese Americans were forced into these camps in fear that some of them were spies for Japan.
English (London), Flemish, Dutch, and North German: patronymic from the personal name Steven . The surname of Flemish origin is also found in the Walloon part of Belgium. In North America, the English form of the surname has also absorbed some like-sounding Jewish names and various other European cognates, e.g. Greek Stefanidis , Serbian Stevanović (see Stevanovic ), Slovenian and Slovak Štefanič (see Stefanic ).
Dictionary of American Family Names © Patrick Hanks 2003, 2006.
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